
Without talking to someone who's actually created one of these things, this is all pure speculation. The gas doesn't have to pass through the reed, although the air from the bag does. If you tapped the gas source into the drone above the reed, it wouldn't be affected by the flame at all. Now, what about the reed or double reed? Reeds are usually at the end of the instrument where the air is blown in in a bagpipe drone, that's inside the bag. Also, if the flame only lasts for a second or two (and I didn't see any that lasted much longer than that), it probably won't affect the wood of the drone at all and, of course, the flame will go away the instant the gas flow stops.

My consultant pointed out that the flow of gas up the tube, before ignition, would cool the area somewhat.

It would have to have a jet poking up inside the drone, and some kind of spark arrangement on the jet to light it finally it would have to have either one or two switches the player could use to control the gas flow and the spark (separately or together). We both agreed that anyone doing this has to put some kind of gas source (The Crucible uses propane) inside the bag. I regret that I didn't think to ask his name he was an older man with a white beard, wearing a hat, sitting next to the booth. I dropped in at their booth and posed my question, and learned some very interesting things from a man there.

Now, one group which is always at the Mini Maker Faire is The Crucible, an Oakland non-profit specializing in art production involving fire. I asked the guy about the bagpipes, but he said no, he didn't know anything about flaming bagpipes. Mini Maker Faires usually have flame-throwers somewhere this one had a guy (from Sheet Metal Alchemist) with a tower of flamethrowers you could set them off by swinging a mallet at a lever, just like the old "ring the bell" carny act, except this one produces a huge burst of flame in the air above you. I spent part of last weekend at the East Bay Mini Maker Faire in Oakland, California. This leaves a huge question in my mind: how the devil do you blow a huge blast of flame through a wooden reed or double reed instrument without incinerating the whole boiling, and the bagpiper too? And yet both of these bagpipers continued to play while intermittently shooting bursts of flame out of the drones. This explains a lot about the way bagpipes sound, actually. And I definitely learned from Wikipedia that bagpipe drones are either reed instruments (like a clarinet) or double-reed instruments (like an oboe). But to the best of my knowledge, the chanter (the one the piper fingers) and the drones are made of wood, although Wikipedia doesn't confirm this directly.

Now, I like bagpipes, a taste I inherited from my mother not everyone does. You can find more videos, if you're interested, by searching for "flaming bagpipes" on YouTube. Unicycling Darth Vader Upgrades to Flaming Bagpipes Drones are the pipes which stick out of the bags and produce a single tone each. Over the last couple of months I've seen two short videos posted on Facebook, in which bagpipe players, playing their instruments, caused bursts of flame to come out of the drones.
